F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Is this too much of an overclock?

Is this too much of an overclock?

Is this too much of an overclock?

H
HeyItsFoxy
Junior Member
5
05-21-2023, 11:57 AM
#1
Hey, I just bought a new PC and saw it was overclocked. I'm not sure if the adjustments are too much.
H
HeyItsFoxy
05-21-2023, 11:57 AM #1

Hey, I just bought a new PC and saw it was overclocked. I'm not sure if the adjustments are too much.

T
The_Legend_
Member
66
05-21-2023, 01:43 PM
#2
Good news, it looks like Skylake handles higher vcore better than Haswell. Silicon lottery tests chips around 1.4v. As of February 16, 2016, about a third can be overclocked at a reasonable 1.40v setting. For the I7-6700K, the percentages are: 4.8% for 18%, 4.7% for 56%, 4.6% for 87%, and 100% for 4.5%. I’d suggest using adaptive voltage and speedstep to lower the voltage and multiplier when the CPU isn’t busy.
T
The_Legend_
05-21-2023, 01:43 PM #2

Good news, it looks like Skylake handles higher vcore better than Haswell. Silicon lottery tests chips around 1.4v. As of February 16, 2016, about a third can be overclocked at a reasonable 1.40v setting. For the I7-6700K, the percentages are: 4.8% for 18%, 4.7% for 56%, 4.6% for 87%, and 100% for 4.5%. I’d suggest using adaptive voltage and speedstep to lower the voltage and multiplier when the CPU isn’t busy.

V
Venpirman
Member
219
05-28-2023, 08:34 PM
#3
It seems like the voltage is too high for the intended overclock, so reducing it to the 1.28 area might help stability.
V
Venpirman
05-28-2023, 08:34 PM #3

It seems like the voltage is too high for the intended overclock, so reducing it to the 1.28 area might help stability.

M
MeadowGrass
Junior Member
4
05-28-2023, 09:28 PM
#4
Good news, it looks like Skylake handles higher vcore better than Haswell. Silicon lottery tests chips around 1.4v. As of February 16, 2016, about a third can be overclocked at a reasonable 1.40v. For the I7-6700K, the percentages are: 4.8% for 18%, 4.7% for 56%, 4.6% for 87%, and 100% for 4.5%. I’d suggest using adaptive voltage and speedstep to lower the voltage and multiplier when the CPU isn’t busy.
M
MeadowGrass
05-28-2023, 09:28 PM #4

Good news, it looks like Skylake handles higher vcore better than Haswell. Silicon lottery tests chips around 1.4v. As of February 16, 2016, about a third can be overclocked at a reasonable 1.40v. For the I7-6700K, the percentages are: 4.8% for 18%, 4.7% for 56%, 4.6% for 87%, and 100% for 4.5%. I’d suggest using adaptive voltage and speedstep to lower the voltage and multiplier when the CPU isn’t busy.

J
joshwars
Junior Member
44
05-29-2023, 05:35 AM
#5
Thanks guys
J
joshwars
05-29-2023, 05:35 AM #5

Thanks guys